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Navigation & Localization, 2024:6

Domain-specific representation of social inference by neurons in the human amygdala and hippocampus.

2024-12-04, Science Advances (10.1126/sciadv.ado6166) (online)
Adam N Mamelak, Ueli Rutishauser, Shuo Wang, Ralph Adolphs, Runnan Cao, and Julien Dubois (?)
Inferring the intentions and emotions of others from behavior is crucial for social cognition. While neuroimaging studies have identified brain regions involved in social inference, it remains unknown whether performing social inference is an abstract computation that generalizes across different stimulus categories or is specific to certain stimulus domain. We recorded single-neuron activity from the medial temporal lobe (MTL) and the medial frontal cortex (MFC) in neurosurgical patients performing different types of inferences from images of faces, hands, and natural scenes. Our findings indicate distinct neuron populations in both regions encoding inference type for social (faces, hands) and nonsocial (scenes) stimuli, while stimulus category was itself represented in a task-general manner. Uniquely in the MTL, social inference type was represented by separate subsets of neurons for faces and hands, suggesting a domain-specific representation. These results reveal evidence for specialized social inference processes in the MTL, in which inference representations were entangled with stimulus type as expected from a domain-specific process.
Added on Monday, December 9, 2024. Currently included in 1 curations.
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Partially dissociable roles of the orbitofrontal cortex and dorsal hippocampus in context-dependent hierarchical associations.

2024-11-20, Current Biology (10.1016/j.cub.2024.10.049) (online)
Sophie Peterson, Jose Chavira, Jesus Alejandro Garcia Arango, David Seamans, Emma D Cimino, and Ronald Keiflin (?)
Reward cues are often ambiguous; what is good in one context is not necessarily good in another. To solve this ambiguity, animals form hierarchical associations in which the context gates the retrieval of appropriate cue-evoked memories. These hierarchical associations regulate cue-elicited behavior and influence subsequent learning, promoting the inference of context-dependency. The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and dorsal hippocampus (DH) are both proposed to encode a "cognitive map" encompassing hierarchical, context-dependent associations. However, OFC- and DH-specific contributions to the different functional properties of hierarchical associations remain controversial. Using chemogenetic inactivation in rats, we show that the OFC is essential to both properties of hierarchical associations (performance regulation and learning bias). In contrast, DH's role appears limited to the contextual learning bias conferred by hierarchical associations. This work establishes the OFC as a critical orchestrator of hierarchical associations and provides insights into the extended circuits mediating the functional properties of these associations.
Added on Monday, December 9, 2024. Currently included in 1 curations.
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Navigation & Localization

Curated by Matthijs Dorst, University of Oslo
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Work related to place tuning, spatial navigation, orientation and direction. Mainly includes articles on connectivity in the hippocampus, retrosplenial cortex, and related areas.

There are 84 articles included in this curation.
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Related issues:
2024:9 December 19th, 2024
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2024:7 December 10th, 2024
2024:6 December 9th, 2024
2024:5 December 3rd, 2024
2024:4 Hippocampus and Rhythm
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